1866 halfpenny with tonnage figures scratched into the obverse field as a vulgar fraction. In this case 138 in front of the bust and 405 behind...
'Ormonde' halfcrown struck on an irregular flan of good weight. The obverse die in the heavily flawed state. These were struck in Ireland in 1643...
A few more. James I third coinage shilling with plume over the shield and mm. Lis. ex Lingford and R C Carlyon-Britton collections [ATTACH]...
I can't help because my US catalogues are a bit thin on the ground having only a few hundred in total from all houses. Have you tried Bryce Brown...
Thanks GinoLR & tenbobbit. I'll see what I can find in the way of reference literature.
It's a bit late now, but I'll dig out the macro lens tomorrow for the Indian. Forget the Byzantines, I'll bin them. They aren't really collectable...
1867 Bronzed Proof Halfpenny [ATTACH]
Something Indian? weight 3.42g and a couple of Eastern Med. coppers. Many thanks.
A few more patterns An 1887 Weyl milled edge pattern halfpenny struck in tin. ex Murdoch, Roberts and Nicholson collections [ATTACH] Freeman 706A...
The E is seen as the first letter of EXVRGAT and in DISSIPENTVR to the right of 1644 OX. The same E punch was used on the D23 obverse in REX by...
Patrick Deane, the dealer who sold the first portion of his token collection at Baldwin's last October. That Bedale halfpenny wasn't in the...
A random selection. Henry VIII posthumous issue 4oz silver groat struck at Durham House. ex Parsons, Ryan and Blakey collections. [ATTACH] 1787...
Thanks. You can do a certain amount of chronology using the coins. The Royalist issues were only struck to pay troops when there was an excess of...
I'm happy based on the matching toning it is Adams 688 and with an almost certain sense of conviction it is also ex Spink 50, 'Property of a...
A few more Civil War pieces A W/SA groat with rose/helmet marks. Much rarer than the lis/helmet marked coins, this piece appears to be the only...
The SSC is correct, the Roses & Plumes is this one. Roses in the 2nd & 3rd quarter signify English silver and a plume in the 1st & 4th quarters...
The only others are plumes signifying Welsh silver, Roses for English, elephant below for silver from the Guinea company, and SSC for the South...
No competition in the 20th century whatsoever. I've basically got a type selection and the odd proof here and there. The only extra is an example...
Let's have a few Saxon. Aethelred Helmet type of Gothabyrig. ex Vogel, Elmore-Jones and Norweb. [ATTACH] Aethelwulf penny with retrograde legends...
Not a name that rings any bells. Where did you buy it from? Auction or dealer?
Separate names with a comma.